On Wed, 2010-02-17 at 03:31 -0500, Christoph Hellwig wrote:
> On Wed, Feb 17, 2010 at 02:55:11PM +1100, Dave Chinner wrote:
> > You've changed a local variable "pos" which had the value
> > iocb->ki_pos to a function parameter of the same name which has a
> > different value. Given this, all the existing uses of "pos" in this
> > function need to be converted to "iocb->ki_pos" as the old
> > xfs_write() never saw the original "pos" variable passed to
> > xfs_file_aio_write().
I think the simplest explanation is that previously, the value
of "offset" passed in is simply &iocb->ki_pos, and Christoph's
changes are then simply replacing "*offset" with "iocb->ki_pos".
In any case, I'm convinced the old is equivalent to the new...
-Alex
> Oh, I should have explained this in more detail. The aio_read/aio_write
> ABI both has a pos argument and the file position in iocb->ki_pos.
> They were added for allowing aio that does partial I/O in each method
> call using retries, but we don't actually use the anywhere. Thus these
> two are always these same and we even enforce that with a
>
> BUG_ON(iocb->ki_pos != pos);
>
> in the code (both old and new). Now how does the old pos local variable
> come in play? The old code didn't want to pass the kiocb to the
> low-level xfs-write function, but as want the offset it passes a pointer
> to iocb->ki_pos, which is called offset. We take a local copy of it
> before we might start modifying it, which we call pos. pos gets updated
> early in generic_write_checks if this is an O_APPEND write, but
> otherwise stays immutable and marks the position where this write
> started, while iocb->ki_pos (aka the old offset) gets updated by
> generic_file_direct_write / generic_file_buffered_write to the new
> file position after the I/O was done.
>
> > Such as here. Actually, I'm surprised the compiler let you take
> > the address of a function parameter considering parameters may be
> > passed in registers....
>
> Taking the address of arguments is perfectly valid in C, the only thing
> you can't take addresses of are "register" variables. This code is
> the same as mm/filemap.c:__generic_file_aio_write, btw.
>
> > > - trace_xfs_file_direct_write(xip, count, *offset, ioflags);
> > > + trace_xfs_file_direct_write(ip, count, iocb->ki_pos, ioflags);
> > > ret = generic_file_direct_write(iocb, iovp,
> > > - &segs, pos, offset, count, ocount);
> > > + &nr_segs, pos, &iocb->ki_pos, count, ocount);
> >
> > But you did convert some ;)
>
> I did carefull convert all offset references to ki->ki_pos, but all
> uses of pos stay the same.
>
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